<cutline_leadin>ICONIC IMAGES:</cutline_leadin> Mount Rushmore may very well be South Dakota’s most famous landmark. At right, a herd of about 1,400 bison live in Custer State Park.<252><252> Photos by Ellen CreagerDetroit Free Press

<cutline_leadin>ICONIC IMAGES:</cutline_leadin> Mount Rushmore may very well be South Dakota’s most famous landmark. At right, a herd of about 1,400 bison live in Custer State Park.<252><252> Photos by Ellen CreagerDetroit Free Press

Mount Rushmore, Black Hills provide view for the ages

As fall begins, the light is as golden as the prairie. The sky is big and blue. This year, with lots of rain, the hills of ponderosa pines undulate in a deep, thick green carpet so solid that the hills really do look black.

One can see why American Indians revere this land so, and why a sculptor spent 14 years hanging off the edge of a cliff to chisel its fine granite.

The Black Hills shout of the vibrant West. And whisper of a far older past.

Of the 2.2 million visitors that Mount Rushmore gets each year, I’d guess about 2.1 million of them zoom up, spend a couple of hours, then speed off. That is such a mistake.

Why? This region where the West and Midwest collide has a rich cultural texture and an eternity’s worth of sweeping scenery, far more than just a mountain with four heads.

I spent five days in this southwest corner of South Dakota, and I have to say I will add it to my unexpected favorite travel spots, along with Memphis, Mexico City and Krakow, Poland. The Black Hills, like those places, delivers more than promised. So let me do a little rundown on my personal highlights, and you can then make your own trip.

▪ Mount Rushmore National Memorial: You see the throngs of tourists snapping away on their cameras as they get a first glimpse of the famous sight in person. But walk closer. And closer. And closer. A nice, wide pavilion gives you the classic view.

Take the Presidential Trail and you’ll get so close you can look up the nostrils of the 60-foot-high sculptures of Presidents Washington, Lincoln and Jefferson and Teddy Roosevelt. Visit sculptor Gutzon Borglum’s studio and a museum that tells the story of how Mount. Rushmore was built between 1927 and 1941 with ingenuity and pure muscle.

Skip the evening illumination ceremony, which is basically just a long video with a few patriotic songs thrown in and a white light shining on the heads.

▪ Keystone: For two days, I based myself in Keystone, a tourist town two miles from the memorial. Keystone is an old mining town that struck it rich with the incoming tourist throngs of Mount Rushmore, but it retains its rough, Western personality.

I took the 1880 Train, a steam train between Keystone and Hill City. I ate buffalo stew at the Ruby House Restaurant, with its lush red flocked wallpaper and rifles on the walls. I breathed the clear, high air in the 4,500-foot altitude. From my hotel room window at the K Bar S Lodge I could see the profile of George Washington at Mount Rushmore.

▪ Crazy Horse Memorial: A must-see to complement Mount Rushmore 17 miles away. In 1948 sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski (and eventually his wife and 10 children) began a sculpture taller than the pyramids of Egypt to honor the Oglala Lakota warrior.

Now that the 87-foot-high head is finally finished, you can easily imagine how the entire completed sculpture will amaze folks long after we’re dead and gone. Take the small bus tour as close as it can get to the fierce pink granite memorial. The site also has a nice American Indian museum and a good restaurant.

▪ Needles Highway and the Iron Mountain Road, Custer State Park: From Crazy Horse I backtracked slightly and took the Needles Highway. It is not for the faint of heart. With switchbacks and drop-offs as it passes pointy spires of ancient granite, the 14-mile drive has vistas worth stopping for — if only you can find a place to stop. At one point, a one-way tunnel blasted through the granite is barely 8 feet wide.

The Iron Mountain Road, connecting the heart of Custer State Park with Keystone, is more accessible and equally as charming. Each of its three tunnels frames a view of Mount Rushmore. It also has curlicue “pigtail” bridges that twist around to maximize the views on the 17-mile trip.

Both of these trails are partly inside Custer State Park and part of a scenic loop called the Peter Norbeck Scenic Byway.

▪ Buffalo herd, Custer State Park: I spent two days at the classic State Game Lodge in Custer State Park, a 71,000-acre park that is the nation’s second-largest state park after the Adirondacks. The south part of the park is a vast prairie environment where 1,400 buffalo roam — descendants of 38 buffalo rescued by conservationists that were turned loose here in 1914. You can drive yourself, but I took a Jeep safari that located several hundred animals still in mating season, with the bulls clumsily courting the lady buffaloes.

▪ Vore Buffalo Jump: An hour west of Rapid City is Beulah, Wyoming, and a significant archaeological site. In the 16th-18th centuries, before they had horses, Plains Indians hunted the buffalo on foot, where they were forced to jump down into the pit. There’s a brand new visitors center here.

You pass the interesting South Dakota towns of Sturgis and Deadwood, plus Spearfish Canyon, on the way to Beulah.

▪ ▪ I flew in and out of the airport at South Dakota’s second largest city (population 70,000), which is just 22 miles from Mount Rushmore. Rapid City has trendy restaurants and bars, plus major souvenir shopping.

Rapid City — like the whole trip — was not at all what I expected. It was far better.

Crazy Horse Memorial: 12151 Avenue of the Chiefs, Crazy Horse; $11 admission per person plus $4 if you want the up-close bus tour, highly recommended. Twice a year (certain dates in June and September) visitors can hike up onto the arm of Crazy Horse (www.crazyhorsememorial.org, 605-673-4681).

Custer State Park: Custer City; $15 entrance fee (www.custerstatepark.com, 605-255-4464). Free to drive the wildlife loop; a free Buffalo Roundup each September is open to the public. To reserve a lodge or cabin within the park, contact www.custerresorts.com, 888-875-0001. The State Game Lodge is on the high end ($150/night-up).

Vore Buffalo Jump: www.vorebuffalojump.org.

Information: Order a South Dakota vacation guide at www.travelsd.com, 800-732-5682. It comes with maps.

Rapid City, South Dakota, has a busy downtown and bronze statues of every president - including John Adams near the central square, President Ronald Reagan near a restaurant.
Ellen Creager
Detroit Free Press

A Native American dancer shows the steps of traditional dances at the Crazy Horse Memorial in southwest South Dakota. With the 87-foot-tall head of Crazy Horse finished and sculptors working on the outstretched arm, it is progressing — but it will likely be beyond our lifetimes before the world’s biggest sculpture is finished.
Ellen Creager
Detroit Free Press

Bison may not be the most photogenic animals up close, but from a distance they are mighty and dramatic. A herd of about 1,400 live in Custer State Park, South Dakota. The bulls can weigh a ton. Photos by Ellen CreagerDetroit Free Press

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